Abstract

Finding ways to tune their states is the key to using correlated electron systems in device applications. The authors show how to cleanly generate an extremely oxygen-starved environment, which leads to the collapse of the insulating ground state in VO${}_{2}$, a prototypical correlated oxide. A nonvolatile metallic phase with unique optical properties is stabilized down to 2 K by oxygen vacancies, and the insulating phase plus intermediate-resistance states can be accessed reversibly via ``oxygen breathing''.

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